NFL
Blake Lively Reacts to Jason Kelce’s ‘Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants’ Review, Shares Book Fun Fact
Entertainment News
Weekly quiz
Julie Bowen
One Direction statements
Mila Kunis on marriage
It List
Cockatoo ‘interpretive dance’
Cynthia Erivo
Nick Jonas
Duggar family books reaction
Us Weekly
Blake Lively Reacts to Jason Kelce’s ‘Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants’ Review, Shares Book Fun Fact
Kaitlin Simpson
Fri, October 18, 2024 at 5:46 PM GMT+1
3 min read
Blake Lively reacts to Jason Kelce Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants review
Blake Lively reacts to Jason Kelce Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants review
Blake Lively is impressed with Jason Kelce’s in-depth analysis of her film, The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants.
“@jason.kelce being a natural investigative journalist sniffing out the hidden truth,” the actress, 37, wrote via her Instagram story on Friday, October 18, alongside a clip of Jason and brother Travis Kelce discussing the 2005 coming-of-age movie on the recent episode of their “New Heights” movie club podcast from Wondery+.
Lively starred in The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants alongside Alexis Bledel, Amber Tamblyn and America Ferrera. The film, which is based on the book series of the same name, follows four friends who decide to stay connected by sharing a pair of pants — which magically fits their very different bodies — while they spend summer vacation apart.
In addition to applauding Jason’s thoughtful response to the movie, Lively also shared a fun tidbit about the book that author Ann Brashares told the actresses on set.
How Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively are Taking Over Travis and Jason Kelce’s ‘New Heights’ Podcast
“Author @annbrashares shared with us when making the movie that she actually added the pants after the book was written because she was given the note to add a ‘magical element,’” she continued. “Mind you, this is when Harry Potter hit, so everyone was looking for magic in youth books.”
Lively explained that Brashares decided to use the pants as a “tangible item” to emphasize the “sometimes inexplicable magic of the female bond.”